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Nick Cohen
Tuesday 2nd November 2010
Rushdie on Jon Stewart

In my previous post about Cat Stevens/Yusuf Islam I quoted Salman Rushdie's surprise that Jon Stewart had given a starring role at his "Rally for Sanity" to a crooner who had previously opined that Rushdie deserved to die for deciding of his own free will to abandon Islam and criticise its texts.

 Salman has messaged me again and says,

I spoke to Jon Stewart about Yusuf Islam's appearance. He said he was sorry it upset me, but really, it was plain that he was fine with it. Depressing.

"Pathetic" is the word I would use. If members of the Tea Party said that American intellectuals who renounced Christiainity deserved to die for their apostasy would Stewart be fine with that too? Of course he wouldn't. His eyes would roll, his voice would thunder and that charming schoolboy smile would vanish from his face. He would never forget, until they repudiated.

With intellectuals from the Muslim world, it is a different matter entirely. Stewart does not seem to mind that Cat Yusuf Stevens Islam has never apologized for his support for Salman's murder, which I documented in the post below. Stewart, and from what I can gather many others on the American Left, are now aping a liberal form of racism we have had in Europe for years. Its unprincipled adherents hold fanatics to be guilty of nothing more than forgivable rhetorical excess when they deliver excuses for murder. They are free to justify threats to novelists or the oppression of women, gays, free-thinkers etc. if — and only if — the novelists, apostates, women, gays, free thinkers etc. have brown rather than white skins.

But then what beyond rank hypocrisy did American liberals expect? They allowed their political movement to be led by comedians, and cannot complain if they get a blackly comic illustration of the "racism of the anti-racists" in return.

 
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Anthony
November 2nd, 2010
8:11 PM
this is rich Cohen. coming from a neoconservative iraq war support like you whose support sent troops into harms way and destroyed many innocent iraqi lives in the process.

TJLA
November 2nd, 2010
6:11 PM
As a baby-boomer in Los Angeles, I can tell you this is just celebrity worship wishful thinking. The baby boomers leading the left have warm fuzzy memories of listening to Peace Train stoned in their dorms. When Yusuf started his comeback it was just too troublesome to consider his radical violent statements. I complained to influential "liberal" radio station KCRW DJ Tom Schnabel when he led the hype to restart Yusuf's career, he just did not care. The irony is that Yususf has totally become the character Rushdie created to ridicule him in Satanic Verses - a pop star used by radical imams as a mouthpiece to blur the lines between the religion of Islam and radical violent evil fundamentalism.

Alee
November 2nd, 2010
4:11 PM
Are people expecting that he make a fiasco of his whole event because of one irresponsible comment one guest made about another decades ago? Sure it's flippant but what would YOU my dear sanctimonious commentators have done? Oh, I know: you wouldn't have thrown a rally at all, one that was primarily designed to promote awareness, not sow scandal.

Matt Kane
November 2nd, 2010
4:11 PM
I think what a lot of people seem to forget about the rally is that it was put on by two comedians. These are not leaders of the Democratic left; they're simply comedians who point out the ridiculousness of American politics and media. They're not trying to shape liberal minds or anything like that; they're trying to get people to laugh. Was Cat Stevens an unfortunate choice to be at this comedic rally? Sure. Does this justify a broad brush stroke against American liberals for being hypocrisy incarnate? Hardly.

jeb_hoge
November 2nd, 2010
4:11 PM
"This makes the Yusuf Islam thing all the more mystifying." It's not mystifying...he's a celebrity and that makes him fit in with the weekend's proceedings. They threw a free concert on a massive party weekend and then tossed some pseudeopolitical rhetoric into the mix to cover the ego-stroking.

rtzh
November 2nd, 2010
4:11 PM
You're ignoring the first, most obvious explanation - Jon Stewart is secretly a radical Muslim. He hates America, so it only makes sense.

Daniel Davies
November 2nd, 2010
2:11 PM
"Brown skins?" Yusuf Islam has an Arabic name, but he's actually British, with a Greek Cypriot father and a Swedish mother.

John P.
November 2nd, 2010
2:11 PM
This gaffe isn't really about Jon Stewart. It's a scathing indictment of America's 'Left' Hundreds of ( I presume progressives) were involved with organising this rally, and yet not one of them appears to have questioned the wisdom of inviting a Far Right clerical fascist to a demo designed to counter what american progressives consider Far Right; the Tea Party movement. American leftists who still have a functioning brain should be undergoing an epiphany with regards to their views, their comrades and their associates. If Far Right clerical fascists like Yusuf Islam can pass for progressives in leftist circles, and that certainly seems to be the case, then the entire political landscape has turned upside down.

Ophelia Benson
November 2nd, 2010
1:11 PM
That doesn't actually describe Stewart though, Nick - he reviled the miniature group "Revolution Muslim" for making death threats against the creators of "South Park" last April, and concluded by doing the "Go f**k yourself" dance. This makes the Yusuf Islam thing all the more mystifying.

George C
November 2nd, 2010
1:11 PM
Excellent point. I have frequently found that American self-styled liberals are nothing of the sort, since they regularly make apologies for the most illiberal and reactionary forces ( so long as the perpetrators are not white or Christian). The danger must be that their hypocrisy actually is the cover for something much more sinister - the rise of religious fascism.

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About Nick Cohen

Nick Cohen is a columnist for the Observer and author of You Can't Read This Book: Censorship in an Age of Freedom (Fourth Estate) and What's Left? How The Left Lost Its Way (Harper Perennial). Living With Lies, a collection of his writing for Standpoint, is available as an ebook. 

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